Mercurio finally seemed to get the message. The look he gave Hunter was as hard as a blade.
“Thanks for showing us around, Dr. de la Poole,” Hunter said, hand extended.
Mercurio grasped it angrily. “Of course.”
This time Hunter didn’t hold back his grip.
O
UTSIDE, THE SUN WAS A MEMORY AND DARKNESS REAL.
Lina and Hunter walked down the pathway, casting strange shadows from the knee-level lighting. No voices came to their ears. Nothing moved farther back in the landscaping.
“Old boyfriend?” Hunter asked blandly.
“Don’t start.” Lina all but snarled into the night. “Sometimes I wonder what goes through Mercurio’s head.”
“I don’t. He wanted you sweaty and horizontal.”
She grimaced. “In his dreams. By the time he noticed me sexually, I had outgrown my crush on him.”
“Bad timing.”
“In hindsight, it was brilliant.”
Hunter’s arm slid around her shoulders. “Yeah.”
She turned toward him and started to say something.
His mouth came down and suddenly Hunter was all Lina knew, all she
could
know. There was no darkness, no stone path, no wild jungle breathing fragrance over the land. There was only Hunter’s heat, his taste of coffee and lightning, need coiling in her until she couldn’t breathe.
“I want you naked,” he said against her mouth.
“And horizontal?” she teased. But it sounded more like a suggestion.
“Any way I can get you, including straight up.”
“Like an ice-cream cone?”
“You change your mind about being shy?” he asked.
“I’ve been thinking about it. A lot.”
He shuddered when Lina’s tongue caressed up his neck and along his jawline, pausing over the dent in his chin. He lifted her until her legs were wrapped around his hips and his cock rubbed against her hot, moist center.
“Yeah, just like an ice-cream cone,” he said roughly. “I wanted to lick you all over last night, but I was afraid you’d bolt.”
“That was last night.”
“And now?”
“You make me adventurous.”
A door slammed somewhere behind them. Reluctantly Hunter allowed Lina to slide down his body until she was standing so close to him he could feel her hard nipples against his chest. He breathed out roughly.
“Car,” he said.
For a moment all Lina could think about was getting closer to him. Naked close. Then reality came like a cold rain.
“I’ll drive,” she said huskily. “The last part of the road is confusing if you don’t know your way, especially in the dark.” She shivered despite the warmth of the night and the heat of the man so close to her. “What you do to me should be illegal.”
“Not yet. We’ll get to that part later tonight.”
“My family is old-fashioned.”
“So am I.” He smiled, a flash of white in the darkness. “I’ve always wanted to climb up a trellis to a woman’s second-floor bedroom.”
“Naked?”
“Only after I get inside.”
Lina laughed. She wanted to kiss Hunter again, but didn’t trust herself. So she turned to the Bronco waiting out front. By the time she got in and fastened her seat belt, she could almost take a full breath again.
Almost.
If she didn’t look at Hunter’s lap.
She turned the key and drove onto the highway. Within minutes, the colorful lights of Pueblo Tulum had been replaced by the occasional eerie flash of animal eyes reflected in the Bronco’s headlights along the roadside. Shrines loomed and vanished like random ghosts congealing from the shadows of the jungle.
Eventually Lina turned off the highway onto a series of roads that became more and more narrow until they unraveled into tangle of dirt tracks and semipaved lanes.
“You were right,” Hunter said. “I’d be lost by now. GPS only shows where you are, not where you want to be. The maps I have of this area don’t show nearly this many trails.”
“That’s because we’re on Reyes Balam lands. The main access to the estate is kept in reasonable shape, but the rainy season hasn’t officially ended. Only the worst washouts will have been repaired, and nothing will be scraped and oiled until things dry out more.”
“Looks fairly dry to me.”
“Yes,” Lina said without looking away from the road. “The rainy season was stingy this time. But it’s not too late for some real drenching storms. For the sake of the villagers, I hope rain comes.”
“No irrigation?”
“Only where the ancient stone ditches have been patched. And even then, the ditches lose more water than they carry.”
Hunter waited until Lina had negotiated a rough segment of washed-out road before he said, “Mercurio thinks one or more of your family is involved in the illegal artifact trade.”
There was a long silence while the thinning jungle rippled by in the headlights. More and more limestone outcroppings poked through, like fangs fighting the plants that struggled to rule.
“So do a lot of people,” she said finally. “Nobody has had any luck proving it. And plenty have tried. Being local aristocrats isn’t the same as being bulletproof. Without Carlos’s success in the cement business and our mahogany farms, the family would be land-poor and getting poorer. Celia contributes as well.”
“What about the villages on your estate?”
“They’re black holes for money. We pay for their religious celebrations, doctor their sick, bury their dead, give money for marriages and births, and send their children to schools. In return, they work on the estate lands, keep us in fresh food and game, and pay to rent croplands.”
“Sounds downright feudal,” Hunter said.
“It works for them. They can leave whenever they want. The ambitious or restless do. Many of them come back. Cities are cruel to the poor.”
“So is the countryside.”
Lina swerved to avoid a downed tree. The tires crunched over small branches. The smell of crushed foliage flowed like oil through the open windows.
“So you’ve never known any of your people to dig illegally in the ruins?” Hunter asked.
“There are always rumors,” she said slowly, “but once Carlos took over the family mahogany and cement businesses, the rumors dried up. The source of our money was obvious even to people who disliked us.”
“Sounds like Carlos rules with bare knuckles.”
Lina’s mouth flattened. “Sometimes it’s that or go under. Or have our lands pockmarked with illegal digs, new and old.”
“Leave enough bodies and word gets out that the reward isn’t worth the risk,” Hunter agreed. “It’s a management technique that never ages.”
“Bodies?” She laughed. “Nothing that dramatic. Money works quite well. Carlos keeps the villages happy. They keep him happy. It’s what the Reyes Balam family has always done.”
“Yet Rodrigo, who knows more about this part of the Yucatan than the devil himself, believes there are tomb robbers on Reyes Balam land. Mercurio would have said the same, but he was too busy trying to charm your shorts off.”
“And you?” Lina asked tightly. “Do you believe my family is little better than the narco cartels? Money first and everything else second?”
“I believe you’re honest.” Hunter’s fingers skimmed down her cheek. “I believe the jungle hides as many secrets as hell does, and damn near as many bodies. Until we know some of those secrets, we’re running naked through places where angels in armor would tiptoe.”
Lina chewed delicately on her lower lip. “I know my family—especially my parents—aren’t angels, armored or otherwise. That’s not the same as believing they’ve lied to me all my life.”
Hunter picked over all the possible responses, trying to find one that wouldn’t push Lina away from him.
“Whoever has those missing artifacts is corrupt to the bone,” he said finally, remembering the basement abattoir, “and more dangerous than a bag full of grenades with loose pins. I don’t want you hurt, sweetheart.”
“It wasn’t exactly safe in Houston.”
“No. And we can’t assume it’s safe here.”
“So…you
do
believe my family is dirty.”
“Dirty as in narco dirty? No. Rodrigo didn’t say anything about drugs or El Maya,” Hunter said. “He just told me I should get the hell out of the Yucatan. He didn’t hint at any danger to you.”
“But you’re still here.”
Hunter didn’t say anything. He didn’t have to. His presence was the only statement that mattered.
T
HE ENTRANCE TO THE
R
EYES
B
ALAM ESTATE WAS GUARDED
by nothing but jungle. The grounds were only partially illuminated, just enough to tell Hunter that the landscaping was expansive and not heavily pruned. Smaller homes—probably separate quarters for guests—orbited the big house like cottages around a high-end hotel. The architecture was a mix of Spanish and Maya, modern and ancient. Construction seemed to follow the fortunes of the Reyes Balam family. Older buildings had been renewed and new ones had been built when the family had money.
“Carlos obviously has done well,” Hunter said.
“Once he was through his rebellious years, he has worked tirelessly for the family. Unlike my grandfather, who nearly ruined the family by picking the wrong fight, Carlos has avoided politics.”
“Avoided the limelight, yes,” Hunter said. “No one with real money avoids politics, especially in Mexico.”
What Hunter didn’t have to say was that Carlos was listed among the top tier of wealthy businessmen in Mexico. If people bought cement or mahogany, chances were good that they bought from some arm of Reyes Balam enterprises.
Lina turned off the headlights. The jungle flowed closer, part of the darkness. The stars were lost to the high overcast. Somewhere the moon glowed, but not here, not now.
She drew in a deep breath and let it out slowly. “I love the smell here. Green, living, laced with a hint of flowers and heat.”
“Home,” Hunter said.
Her answer was a soft laugh. “I never thought of it like that, but you’re right. The early memories are the deepest. The sweet mysteries of the jungle, the music of children laughing, women calling to one another at the market, the smell of pork and chiles and unsweetened chocolate. The shocking coolness of jumping into a cenote on a hot day. Playing hide-and-seek among the ruins while the faces of gods watched. The music of life that is the jungle at night. It seems so long ago for me and yet close enough to touch.”
“A lot different from Houston.”
“Houston has its own beauty,” Lina said absently, listening to the jungle. “The rush and tumble of human life, the feeling of being within a giant’s heartbeat, shops offering goods from all over the world, the rhythms of different languages.”
“And the artifacts that tie past and present together,” Hunter said.
“That most of all. The people who lived in the Yucatan before the Spanish have always fascinated me. The resort cities…not so much. They don’t seem quite real, like they landed from outer space.”
The ticks and pops of the cooling engine blended with the random animal noises of the jungle that surrounded the compound. Though neither Lina nor Hunter said anything, they weren’t eager to leave the intimacy of the vehicle and the conversation that had nothing to do with blood and fear.
“I’ve never been able to decide which I like better,” Hunter said, “exploring the marshes of my childhood or the jungles of my adulthood.”
“What about cities?”
“A great place to get supplies, clean clothes, some shows, good food, and see friends. Overall, I prefer greenery to cement. But I’ll take a big city over a small town any day. My uncles are the opposite. They hate cities and love Brownsville.”
“I’m torn between my love of being on a dig and the richness of knowledge that comes with a city,” Lina admitted. “I finally realized that I need both.”
“Me, too.” Hunter linked his fingers with hers, savoring the smooth warmth of her hand in his.
She leaned close enough to smooth his hair back from his face with her free hand. He turned slightly and kissed her palm.
“I suppose we have to go in,” she said.
“Probably. Someone is sure to have noticed us by now. Is your neck itching?”
Her smile was bright in the darkness. “I’m used to being watched by family when I’m here. I am the only Reyes Balam of my generation.”
“No wonder you live in Houston. Nobody there is nagging you to be barefoot and pregnant.”
“And married,” she said. “That’s very important to my family.”
“What about you?”
“If it happens, wonderful. But there’s no nail-biting frenzy to get it done. I don’t want the kind of marriage my parents have.”
More lights came on at the front of the big house. A second row of knee-high lights came on along the main walkway to the house.
“I think that’s our cue,” Hunter said.
She sighed. “Good-bye, privacy. Don’t get me wrong. I love my family, but they can be overwhelming.”
“I’ve never met a family that wasn’t.”
Neither moved to get out of the Bronco. Hunter studied as much of the estate as he could see.
Lina studied him.
Despite architectural differences, the various buildings managed to blend together into a pleasing whole. Crushed limestone paths connected outlying buildings to the main house. Gardens thrived with native and imported plants. The blended perfumes of flowers were a silent welcome and an invitation to stay and enjoy. Fountains splashed invisibly, joining all sounds into a gentle music. Native palms and imported bougainvillea interrupted the stucco and tile of the buildings. Sweeping balconies anchored cascades of flowering vines.
“This is what Crutchfeldt was trying for with his monstrosity,” Hunter said in a low voice. “But nothing beats old money and roots that have grown through the centuries.” His eyes adjusted to the darkness, revealing more and more detail. He let out a soft whistle. “I knew the Reyes Balam name went back a long way,” he said, speaking as much to himself as to her, “but it’s beginning to sink in that you were born on an estate the size of Rhode Island. Must have been interesting.”